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Government misses UN deadline on mass graves
August 28, 2009
28.08.09

Government misses UN deadline on mass graves

By: CHRISTOF MALETSKY

TWO months after the expiry of a deadline set by the United Nations for the Namibian Government to shed more light on the alleged disappearance of people following the 2008 discovery of mass graves by the country’s human rights organisation, answers have yet to surface.

The Namibian has reliably established that Government is still compiling answers to the UN Working Group on Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances.

It has requested more time from the UN to compile the response.

The United Nations approached Government after the National Society for Human Rights (NSHR) submitted a dossier to the UN Working Group on Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances to hold the Namibian Government answerable for the mass graves.

The NSHR said in September last year that it had found several mass graves a few kilometres north of the Namibian border in southern Angola and that Namibian and Angolan nationals were buried there between 1999 and 2002.

The human rights group claimed that those buried were rebels and supporters of the Angolan Unita rebel movement who were hunted by soldiers of the Namibian and Angolan armies.

“The Working Group has been informed that there were reasonable grounds to believe that enforced disappearances have occurred and are still occurring on a massive scale in Namibia. Allegedly, Namibia’s de facto state of emergency was used to create conditions to perpetrate disappearances,” Special Rapporteur Santiago Corcuera wrote in a letter to the Namibian Permanent Representative at the UN in May this year.
He said they had information that a group of 40 men and boys aged between 14 and 56 allegedly disappeared soon after Namibian security forces rounded them up in the Kavango Region between November 27 1999 and December 20 1999.

Another group of 18 members of the Kxoe San community also allegedly disappeared without trace on August 12 2000, soon after they were detained by the First Battalion of the Namibian Defence Force and Special Field Force members.

“However, it has been reported that no positive proof has ever been produced and no charges have ever been brought in a court of law,” Corcuera wrote in the letter.

The Working Group was also informed that on August 16 2000 another group of more than 30 Kxoe San villagers disappeared without trace following sweeps by the Namibian security forces at Chetto, Bwabwata, Omega, Mutjiku and Bagani.

They were allegedly accused of collaborating with Unita and the Caprivi secessionist group.
The Working Group said individual people allegedly also disappeared in the Kavango and Caprivi regions during that time.

The UN Working Group on Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances asked Namibia to say whether the NSHR facts are accurate or not, whether specific investigations are undertaken by the Government, whether steps have been taken to assist the family members to ascertain the whereabouts of their loved ones, whether there are any measures in place to bring to justice those responsible for enforced disappearances and whether family members are protected from threats and harassment.

The NSHR had claimed that the people who disappeared were first branded Unita bandits, but were former South West Africa Territory Force (SWATF) or Koevoet members who had fought alongside the South African Defence Force (SADF) against Swapo liberation forces before Independence.

christof@namibian.com.na


Source: www.namibian.com.na
http://www.namibian.com.na/news/full-story/archive/2009/august/article/government-misses-un-deadline-on-mass-graves/


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